NOTE: For those of you on Facebook, you will want to visit my YouTube Channel to view all of the videos, since Facebook’s lame importing functionality doesn’t allow for embeded videos.
As I mentioned before, I had gotten permission from Zhang Laoshi and Han Laoshi to have a couple of my 外国朋友 (foreign friends) visit the wushu guan to check out the professional athletes doing their thing. James and Charisse, along with Ruhi, jumped on the bus with me at the crack of morning and we made our way to the morning class.
Of course, what you are really wanting to know about is whether or not Ruhi was able to take any videos of the practice. Well, you had best throw some appreciation towards the wife because she got a ton of really good footage which I am still organizing and editing to put online for everyone to watch. Of course, by the time you read this I should be done, but just pretend that you had to wait an unreasonable amount of time, okay?
James even brought his camera along and was nice enough to toss his photos my way for posting online. So, you can also throw a few “谢谢”over to him as well.
First up are some basics. You might notice that I intentionally cut my own basics out of the videos. I figured that (a) you don’t want me wasting precious bandwidth and resources with my sub-standard jibbengong and (b) it wasn’t something that you don’t probably see in your own wushu guan all the time anyway. Not to worry, I will have a video of my own wushu later on in the blog …
It turned out that this particular day was a heavy nandu focus for training. All the athletes had to do full nandu combinations many times. So, of course that means we were able to get some pretty good nandu footage of the practice:
On the far carpet, as you can see from the previous two videos, there was a group of younger athletes training. I mentioned them before – they are the ones from Northern Shaanxi. It seems that they are here much in the same way that schools from the U.S. come to China for a month in the summer to train in Wushu. The main distinction is that these kids are from China so there is no language or cultural barrier, and they are all much better than kids their age in other countries. But the idea is sort of similar, since they are currently on a break from school so their coaches brought them to train with the “professional” wushu athletes. Here is some of them:
And, as I mentioned, James was nice enough to snap some pictures of the practice. Here are a few from the basics and nandu training:
He managed to take some pretty nice shots, huh?
Anyway, after basics and nandu it was time for forms. Yuan Min told me that we were going to do 16 sections, so I decided to run through 3 of each of my nanquan sections, for a total of 12, and then go through my first section of nan gun 4 more time to flesh out the full 16. I actually ended up doing something a bit more like this:
1 x 3, 2 x 3, rest 1 rotation, 3 x 3, 4 x 3, ng x 3
I really needed to take a short break in the middle there. I’m not quite up to the endurance required for 16 sections in a group of just 6 other people. The turn around is about 2 – 3 minutes for your physical recovery so it is pretty intense. Not quite as intense as that SCWA practice in 2001 where I had to do 8 full forms in a rotation with 3 other people … but it was almost like that.
Here is some of the athlete practice media. First up is Yue Xiao Yu. You can see some really good intensity in the video of her nanquan. I also like some of the pictures James took of her:
After her we’ll watch Yuan Min’s video. i really like how his nan gun form is shaping up. As you might recall, 2 weeks ago he taught me his nangun form. Then a week later he proceeded to rechoreograph almost the entire thing and make himself an even cooler form. So I’m stuck with his outdated hchoreography and he gets to look bad ass. I don’t really mind though. Even his outdated choreography is better than what I could have come up with on my own.
He was giving me a few pointers in that last picture, although the suggestions he gave me during class were way out of my ability level. Some day though …. some.day.
Here are two more southern athletes. One is a younger man who’s name I don’t know (practicing nan gun) and the other is Tian Jing Fang doing some nanquan.
And, of course, it wouldn’t be a wushu practice if someone wasn’t doing a bit of chang quan in the room. Here are two athletes demonstrating a bit of that. The younger man in the first video is actually practicing with a wrapped ankle, so that is why he is sort of taking it a bit easy on some of the moves.
While we were doing our wushu thing, the taiji group was practicing over on the left side of the carpet. Ruhi managed to get a bit of them doing some taiji. So here is some of that.
Recently after practices the coach has had us do some stretching together in a circle. A new development that I am actually rather enjoying.
After class I asked James, Charisse and Ruhi what they thought of the class. For James and Charisse this was the first time they had ever seen wushu, so it was nice to hear a fresh perspective on things. I’ve been around wushu for so long that it is sometimes hard to remember how it felt to discover wushu for the first time. As a bit of background on them, Charisse has around 10 years of dance/ballet experience and James did crew (rowing) at Stanford, so they both have an appreciation for physical sports and exercise.
And, as promised, here is a video of my nanquan practice from Thursday. I will just say right now that my form needs work. But it is at least better than it was before, and I am hopeful that it will continue to improve in to the future.
I realize this was a few days late but hopefully the abundance of wushu videos made it worth your while. I have some more footage from Friday’s class too, which I will try to post up tomorrow if I have any time, including a pretty amazing little girl that has some pretty killer basics. I don’t know who she is, but if she is up for adoption I might have to put in a bid.
Stay tuned for that in the next blog!
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Dude, you get in and out of those kneeling stances so quick. And that inside crescent….TASTY.
It sure doesn’t feel very quick. lol. But thanks!
Btw I don’t think any of us mind watching your Wushu/Jibengong. Don’t keep thinking otherwise.
haha . thanks. now i just have to get over the embarrassment of having them up online.
Nice form, and I like the diff angles you used.
Thanks. Yeah, that was Ruhi’s doing. She is actually a filmmaker by profession so, unlike me, she knows what she is doing.